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| 6/3/26 A hot mess of 13 colors (photo reference) |
Cruising casually on the Blick site one day (as one does), I
came across a series of new products: Caran d’Ache Neocolor II sets with a “Blick
Exclusive” label! At first my heart skipped a beat: What?? New Neo II colors
that only Blick can sell?? It didn’t take long for my heart rate to return to
normal; the colors aren’t new at all. Caran d’Ache has curated four themed palettes
for Blick to sell exclusively. The 15 colors in each set are all from Cd’A’s
standard Neocolor II line, the sets come in Cd’A’s standard red tins, and Blick’s
name is on the sleeves.
It’s an interesting co-marketing play. I know that Blick is widespread in the US, but I wouldn’t have guessed that the art supply store is ubiquitous enough for Cd’A to put the store’s name on one of its bestselling products.
In any case, the most interesting part to me was looking at the colors that had been selected for each theme. I’ve found it to be an intriguing creative exercise to try on a palette that someone else has designed. The first time I tried it was several years ago with the Beya Rebaï Neocolor II sets. More recently, fashion designer Kévin Germanier’s surprising palette of colored pencils inspired me in unexpected ways (which led to my own palette-making discoveries that I’m still applying).
Since I own almost all the Neocolor II colors, I thought it would be fun to recreate a couple of the “Blick exclusive” palettes and try them. Today’s post is my version of the Botanical and Earth Tones palette. A couple of colors are missing here: Cobalt Blue (160) and Emerald Green (210). (I’m sure I own both, as my swatch page includes them, yet both have mysteriously disappeared from my studio. Annoying.) I thought the 13 I had were plenty, though, to make a sketch.
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| Two colors missing from the palette: Cobalt Blue and Emerald Green |
While I do understand that no one is expected to use all the colors in the set in a single work, I gave myself that challenge just for fun. My natural tendency is to minimize my palettes to the extreme, but my recent bingeing of Colin Woodward’s YouTubes and taking his mini-workshop have pushed me to try being more maximalized.
Since the theme is flowers and plants, I dug through my reference photos to find one with lots of both, especially in the colors of the palette. The hot mess shown here is the result. The greens were all familiar to me, as I use them often (one is in my current daily-carry). I found it odd, though, that the set includes two olive-y greens that are so similar. I suppose the light blue was intended for the sky in landscapes, but the photo I chose had none visible, so I tossed it around at will. I didn’t learn much from this palette except that 13 colors were too many for this sketch, and I winced at the lack of palette cohesion. Making the scribbly mess was fun, though.
Stay tuned for tomorrow’s post when I recreate another “Blick exclusive” palette.





















